| Royal Thai Armed Forces    
																												
			Under 
			direct command of the  
			
						Ministry of Defence, 
			the Kingdom of Thailand has about 314,000 
			armed 
			forces (fig.), consisting 
			of both regular cadres and conscripts.  
          Men 
			reaching  
          the 
			age of  
          twenty-one  
          are 
			subject to two years of compulsory military service 
          and conscription is determined by lot.  
			At the age of twenty every boy is summoned to come and draw a lot of 
			which the colour determines the outcome: if the colour is red, one 
			is drafted; if black, one is exempt (fig.).  
          Volunteers 
			may join up at the age of 18.  
			   
          The military includes three main branches: the Royal Thai Army 
			(fig.) 
			with about 190,000 staff 
			(fig.), the  
						
						
			Royal Thai Navy (fig.) with around 79,000 personnel 
			(including naval aviation personnel and members of the marine 
			corps), and the Royal Thai Air Force, estimated at 45,000. Reserve forces total 
			about 200,000 recruits. In addition, the Royal Thai Army has a 
			Medical Department (fig.), which in Thai is known as
			
																												
			
			krom phaet thahaan bok and which in 
			2010 celebrated its 110th anniversary (fig.). The King is the rightful head of the Royal 
			Thai Armed 
			Forces and he and his family are guarded by 
																														the 
																												Royal Guards 
																
																(fig.), i.e. the King's Own Guard (fig.), 
						whose former barracks are located within the compound of the
																
						
						Grand Palace 
						(fig.) in Bangkok (fig.) and of which since 1978 has been headed by the Crown Prince,  as well as by a special royal protective unit  of the Royal Thai Police. The soldiers who have successfully passed the elite training to become Royal Guards are sometimes referred to as red-rim soldiers, after their white T-shirts with red rims on the collar and sleeves which they receive upon completion of their training.  
																												After successfully graduating as pre-cadets from the Armed Forces Academies Preparatory School (AFAPS) in Nakhon Nayok, 
																												a two year education at 
																												mathayom plaay (มัธยมปลาย) or ‘senior high school’ 
																												level, army cadets are further trained in 
			 the adjacent 
Chulachomklao Royal Military Academy (fig.) or CRMA (fig.), which was founded on 5 August 1887 (fig.) 
																												by King 
		      
			
			Rama V 
					(fig.) and initially housed in the back of
					
						
			the 
					
			Saranrom
					
					Palace (fig.) in 
		      
		      		
		      Bangkok, 
					where today the 
					
					Royal Thai Survey Department 
					(fig.) is located. 
																												AFAPS graduates that opt for the 
																												
			Royal Thai Navy  (fig.) will advance to the Royal Thai Naval Academy (RTNA) in 
			Samut Prakan, whilst 
																												graduates that choose for the 
																												
																												
			Royal Thai Air Force 
																												will continue their training at the Royal Thai Air Force Academy in 
	
	
			Saraburi 
	(fig.), officially known as 
			
			Rohng Rian Nai Reua Ahkaht Nawamintha 
			Kasatriyathiraat (fig.), whilst police cadets (fig.) will attend the 
																												
			Royal Thai Police Academy (fig.) in 
			
	      																										Nakhon Pathom.  
			 The Headquarters of the Royal Thai Armed Forces are in  
		
			
		Bangkok's 
	Laksi District (map - fig.), whilst the Headquarters of the Royal Thai Army is located in 
																												
		            
		            																							
	                Phra 
	      																										Nakhon (fig.), Royal Thai Navy HQ in the old Wichai Prasit Fort (fig.) in the former 
					
					
					Thonburi Palace (fig.), and the Royal Thai Air Force Headquarters on the eastern side of 
			
																												
			Don Meuang Airport (fig.). The flag of the Royal Thai Army's Supreme Command combines the colours and emblems of its three branches (fig.), whilst that of the Supreme Commander is the same but with 5 yellow stars that semi-encircle the bottom of the emblem (fig.). 
																												National Armed 
	Forces Day (fig.) is 
	celebrated annually on 18 January, to commemorate the victory of King   
    																											
    																											Naresuan the Great (fig.), who defeated the Burmese crown prince in a duel
	fought on the back of a 
	
	war elephant (fig.) on 18 January 1593, in the Battle of Nong Sarai. In Thai, 
			 the Royal Thai Armed Forces are referred to as 
			 
              kong thap and 
			  
			
			saenyahkon, which can be translated as 
			  
																												‘army’, ‘troops’ or ‘military might’. See also  
                																								
                Krasuang Kalaahome,
		
		
		History of Thai Army Uniforms,
			
			 
			 
          and 
																												Ranks of the Royal Thai Military. See also TRAVEL PICTURE and 
																												WATCH VIDEO. 
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